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Pentaho 5.0 Reporting by Example: Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   Pentaho 5.0 Reporting by Example: Beginner's Guide Learn to use the power of Pentaho for Business Intelligence reporting in a series of simple, logical stages. From installation in Windows or Linux right through to publishing your own Java web application, it's all here.

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2013
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781782162247
Length 342 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Author (1):
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Mariano, GARCIA MATTIO Mariano, GARCIA MATTIO
Author Profile Icon Mariano, GARCIA MATTIO
Mariano, GARCIA MATTIO
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. What is Pentaho Report Designer? FREE CHAPTER 2. Installation and Configuration 3. Start PRD and the User Interface (UI) Layout 4. Instant Gratification – Creating Your First Report with PRD 5. Adding a Relational Data Source 6. Adding Groups 7. Adding Parameters 8. Using Formulas in Our Reports 9. Adding Charts 10. Adding Subreports 11. Publishing and Running Reports in Pentaho BA Server 12. Making a Difference – Reports with Hyperlinks and Sparklines 13. Environment Variables, Stylesheets, and Crosstabs 14. PRD Reports Embedded in Web Applications A. Sakila DB Data Dictionary B. Pop Quiz Answers Index

Summary

We explained what Java Platform Enterprise Edition (JEE) is and its main components; among them, we discussed Servlets, JSP, EJB, and WS. We explained what Apache Tomcat is, and downloaded, configured, installed, and initiated it. We explained what Eclipse and WTP are. We downloaded Eclipse, configured its workspace, and installed and initiated it.

Within Eclipse, we created a new project of the type dynamic web and defined its runtime. In order to test our project, we created and configured an Apache Tomcat instance. We configured a JDBC/JNDI connection pool and copied MySQL's JDBC driver into our project. We also copied the required PRD libraries as well as the report 11_Adding_Charts.prpt.

We created and configured a Listener for the initialization of PRD's API. To handle requests, processing, and routing, we created and configured a Servlet. We created a web client so that the user can interact with our application. Finally, we packaged our finished project.

Approaching...

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